The cloud-based service Ubuntu One goes into the public beta phase. Using Ubuntu One, computers can be synchronized via online memory. So far, Canonical is withholding details.

Ubuntu One, now in the closed beta phase, enables the exchange of files between Ubuntu 9.04 computers over the Internet. Anyone wanting to participate in the beta test can request an access code, which is required to access Ubuntu's Launchpad. Ubuntu One users with the Free plan get 2GB of storage space. For US$ 10 per month, users get 10GB.

To use the Ubuntu One service, the user downloads the software via the PPA service and installs it. Detailed instructions are available on the Ubuntu One website.

The website does not say how long the beta phase lasts. The service is reminiscent of Dropbox, but has the advantage of working cross-platform and offering some additional features. Also missing on the Ubuntu One pages is information about privacy and security when transmitting data.

Related content

Have you ever dreamed of backing up your laptop data on the Internet and synchronizing multiple computers independently of the operating system? The Dropbox online service grants this wish with just a couple of mouse clicks.

Comments

Dropbox Clone Ubuntu One

Marita Mounger

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not a clone

manysounds

This really isnt a clone of dropbox or anything at all. The eventual result is intended to be a place where your browser's bookmarks auto-sync, your calendars sync, contacts live AND files and things and stuff. Almost like a google account workaround for your personal info, without the google EULA.
Calling it a clone is oversimplified and off-track.

iFolder

Truth Police

I have been using iFolder for years synching XP and SLED systems with NO issues. It is not only the FIRST file synching technology, it is the first OSS version.

Both DropBox and Ubuntu One are iFolder clones so get that straight up front.
I also use DropBox on my Ubuntu system and it works great and I have 5GB for free due to referrals.

Ubuntu One will need to come in line with DropBox pricing (free up to 5GB or 50GB for $10/mo.) before I will pay attention.

Novell Ifolder?

opensourcetutor.com

You have to be kidding right? the open source version.. try and get a client and server version working together and then once you actually achieve that amazing feat, try and get another client working with a different OS.

I used Ifolder for approx two years before Dropbox but I then upgraded to a new distro and I spent 2 days trying to get Ifolder to build successfully on the server and then when I did, I couldn't get a windows client to work with it... I believe it hasn't been updated in a long time either.

Dropbox is a no-brainer for me, though I would be inclined to support Ubuntu if they come close on the price point of Dropbox.

PS: The capture implemenation is one of the worst I have seen. Why not put it at the bottom and if you get it wrong, put a back button or better yet, redisplay my text and the new captcha

Yet another reimplementation of dropbox or iFolder

ajft

Novell iFolder anyone? Open source and its been doing much the same thing for years.

Not sure *where* you got the idea that Dropbox wasn't cross platform. Not open source, yes. Not cross platform? Wrong.

Wow, what a horribly written article

John

You've got to be kidding me. If THIS can get published, then there is how for us all to be 'writers'. I know eight-graders who write better than that.

Linux Mag should take this article down and have it re-written or at least proofed again. What a joke.

Not a very enticing offer

Adam

2GB free is the same as Dropbox's free offering (although Dropbox will bump that up to 5GB with referrals). Dropbox's $10/mth (or $99/year) offering is also for 50GB, rather than 10GB.

So far, this looks like just a more expensive Dropbox, but with zero information about features. Not enough to get me excited yet.

Very choppily written...

Anonymous

"Ubuntu one-time users receive 2 gigabytes of storage space, and those who pay U.S. 10 dollars per month receive 10 gigabytes."
What is an "Ubuntu one-time user"? Really... that should be "Ubuntu One free user" (or something along those lines).

"The website does not reveal the site how long the beta phase lasts"
"_The website_" does not reveal "_the site_"
confusing repetition.

This could be better rewritten as
"The website does not reveal for how long the project will be in the beta phase."

"The service is strongly reminiscent of Dropbox, but has the advantage of working cross-platform and offering some additional features."
This is confusing, seeing as Ubuntu One is in beta. (therefore having less features, and, in this case, is not really cross platform.)

Rewritten: "The service is strongly reminiscent of Dropbox, which has the advantage of working cross-platform and offering some additional features."

swapping the word "but" with the word "which" has a drastic effect on the meaning of the sentence.

"The Ubuntu makers have generally held back information."
should be written as
"The makers of Ubuntu One, Canonical, have generally held back information."

Apart from that a well-written, if not sparse, article. Do these articles not get edited? Why did an article with so many mistakes get published to the web? I am sorry for sounding so intensely critical, but this article was so full of mistakes that I felt bad to just walk away....

Funding system...

MPCM

Nice way to fund Ubuntu... I'm game.

Dropbox is also cross-platform

Josh

Dropbox is, and has been since it's inception, cross-platform as well. I've used it to great effect for keeping important files synced between Mac, Linux, and Windows boxes. So that's one advantage Ubuntu One does not have over Dropbox...